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ENG 1A (Turner) - Topics in Social Justice: Websites

Open Websites

Open websites, or those freely available on the web using a search engine like Google, are becoming increasingly valuable to researchers as more and more government, educational institutions, and foundations are providing information and data about their work online. While there is A LOT of great information out there, remember that anyone can put information on the open web, so evaluating the material to make sure it is credible becomes more difficult and important.

Many of the best sites to use are those from education (.edu), government (.gov), private organizations & foundations (.org), and international (.int). To easily search for sites from these entities, use the "site:" search to limit your results.

Citing what you find on the open web is difficult--you may be looking at any number of material types (books, journal articles, magazine articles, video, etc.) and if that is the case you need to cite it as the specific material type, but indicate that you accessed it through an open website.  If the item doesn't seem to be any of the traditional material types, it may just need to be cited as a plain website. 

Find Websites

Google Web Search

Some example searches:

"children's rights" healthcare 

"environmental justice" water 

ageism employment

disability discrimination

Limiting your search:

To limit results to nonprofits organizations, add to search site:org

To limit results to government sites, add to search site:gov

To limit results to education sites, add to search site:edu

To omit results containing commercial site, add to search site:-com

Featured Websites